XP Overclocking Benchmarks


Rendering
Performance - CINEBENCH R10


CPU
Performance - Super PI


General
Graphics Performance


File
Compression Performance - WinRAR 3.70


Gaming
Performance - Battlefield 2


Gaming
Performance - Company Of Heroes

Thoughts on basic overclocking

The Maximus Extreme fares well in all our 3D based tests. Obviously, the performance gains are not huge, as you never get double the performance for double the price. Results between the P5E3 Deluxe and the Maximus Extreme are tight, so choosing either board for a daily system is not going to offer significant advantages at this level of overclocking. Benchmarks such as Super Pi 32M really benefit from very tight secondary RAM timings - often far beyond the capabilities of complete system stability - so take the largely un-tuned results here with a pinch of salt. The board is stable up to around 465 FSB with 65nm quad processors. For those who are interested in Folding@Home, 450 FSB is the real limit.

Although not shown here, we did run some Vista based stability testing with 4GB of memory. Results were very promising: full 4GB stability at DDR3 1700-1800 with 1N command rate also came in around 445-450FSB. Users who buy this board with 24/7 use in mind will generally be avid gamers. For this purpose, the X38 boards are marginally faster than their P35 based counterparts are. Also remember, with X38 boards the option of dual - or in this case triple - graphics cards can provide a level of future proofing. Especially as gaming engines are becoming more complex, dual GPUs will be necessary to play games at high-res with maximum detail settings for the near future.

If the sole reason for choosing this board is the additional DDR3 performance gains (albeit small), then top-end DDR3-1800 modules will be necessary to realize any benefits. At speeds below DDR3-1600 to DDR3-1333, CA 6 to CAS5 performance with DDR3 will show results close to DDR2-1150 at CAS5. If you prefer dual graphics cards without the added expenditure hit of DDR3 memory, there are a couple of DDR2 X38 boards to chose from. The ASUS Maximus Formula fills the role admirably for more advanced overclockers or the Gigabyte GA-X38-DQ6 is a nice alternative.

XP - Everest Cache and Memory Bandwidth Taking a look at the BIOS
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  • retrospooty - Monday, December 10, 2007 - link

    Wireless works yes. They are linked up through the base and work in dos mode. Both RF, and bluetooth meese work.
  • kilkennycat - Monday, December 10, 2007 - link

    I notice from the board picture that the rear mounting holes are still in the corners of the board, so if the WIDTH is 4cm more than the standard ATX, does the board need special mounting ? I assume that WIDTH means the distance across the edge of the board in contact with the rear of the case. Please correct if my assumption is wrong.
  • Rajinder Gill - Monday, December 10, 2007 - link

    THe width is the length across the top edge of the board. Screw hole spacing is still standard ATX, just that this board over-hangs by a few cm (the Sata port end will protrude further into your case) ...

    regards
    Raja
  • kilkennycat - Monday, December 10, 2007 - link

    As yes, you actually mean DEPTH of course, if referencing tower case dimensions (Height x Width x Depth). So any case wishing to accommodate this board needs to have at least 4cm DEEPER front to rear clearance for the motherboard, nothing to do with it being a mid-tower or full-tower. Am I right?

    Might also preclude using this MB in those cases having the motherboard mounted on a slide-in ATX tray ( a great feature, btw ), as they may have a lip or other registration hardware on the leading-edge of the tray.
  • retrospooty - Monday, December 10, 2007 - link

    What size are they? I cant find it here, or on Asus's site. They look like 1/4 inch - which kind of sucks.
  • Rajinder Gill - Monday, December 10, 2007 - link

    The fittings are 1/4", but ASUS does provide adapetrs to use 1/2 tubing..

    Raja..

  • retrospooty - Monday, December 10, 2007 - link

    thanks... bummer. 1/4 restricts my flow.

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